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水均益高端访问,水均益是中国最顶尖的战地记者吗?

2020-11-21 01:06结局

简介 水均益是中国最顶尖的战地记者吗?...

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下面是更多关于水均益高端访问的问答

那要看你想寻哪年的了?第一次98年的已经绝迹,第二次大概是2005年,还有高端访问的DVD在某宝销售。可以去买一套,好多首脑和名人访问。2005年专访布莱尔的视频我买过光盘。 以“反烟品牌、中国反烟网、反烟宣言”等龙头行动“领跑”公益慈善事业的“公益品牌”,是影响着中国和世界的王牌行动! http://cctv.sina.com.cn/news/2006-02-05/10317.html 不容易啊里!看吧!愉快 1955年1月6日恩·圣巴斯蒂安·金森生于英国纽卡斯尔勒姆郡康赛特镇,父营一家400英亩农场,算是中产之家。他是家里最小的儿子,还有两个哥哥,其中一个是经济学家和前英国独立党领导人。在达勒姆唱诗班学校念书时,他和英国前首相托尼·布莱尔是校友,并小后者两岁。

由于滑稽的长相及口吃的毛病,他常受同学欺负,但也能轻易逗人发笑。

艾特金森对精密机械很感兴趣,上大学后,他先在纽卡斯尔大学学习电气工程,后来去了牛津大学女王学院深造,并取得电机工程学博士学位。在他严谨的工科头脑里,欢乐的喜剧细胞常常活蹦乱跳,儿时爱在众人面前搞怪表演的天性,令其加入了牛津戏剧协会、讽刺剧社和试验剧场俱乐部。

憨豆

《高端访问2004年开播, 新闻频道每周日20:00黄金时间播出。中国著国际新闻人水均益是栏目的制片人和标记性的专访记者,迄今已经专访了联合国前秘书长安南和加利、日本首相安倍晋三、俄罗斯总统普京、英国前首相布莱尔、法国前总统希拉克、国际奥委会前任主席萨马兰奇和罗格等200多位世界政要和其他领域内的国际知名人士。

布官找的

Speech to 'What Makes a Champion?' in Beijing

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This is China's moment. A moment to celebrate its culture, civilisation and achievement. A moment to thank the Chinese people for their warmth, their ingenuity and their enterprise. A moment to recognise that whatever the challenges - political, social and economic - there is, in this country, the will, the determination and the humanity to make the future work for China; and in partnership with other nations and cultures, to make it work for people everywhere.

What makes a Champion? We must start with an uncomfortable truth: natural talent helps and especially in sport

I remember still, almost 45 years ago now, running in my first competitive race at my school Sports Day. I remember the running track, grass freshly mowed. A sunny day. The race was over 440 yards. Four times round our small track. I settled in behind the lead runner, calculating to overtake him on the last bend before the straight run to the finish. The race went to plan until just as I reached the bend, I tried to sprint forward. Suddenly, my legs just didn't have the energy. The mental will was there. The physical capacity was not. I remember that feeling of shock and disappointment now as clear as I did then, the disconnection between desire and ability. I still have my silver cup for coming second. But silver was not what I wanted. I wanted gold.

We will applaud the champions of the Olympics knowing that most of us would never have been able to do what they have done.

But I chose to try to be a champion in a different field and it is also true that most people have innate talent at something. Champions are not just athletes. They are scientists, entrepreneurs, artists, philanthropists. They are people who the world sees in photos and on TV, people of fame and wealth. But they are just as often people no one outside a small circle has heard of: champions of compassion, of fortitude under suffering, of works of humanity towards others. Such champions often enjoy less fame or fortune when alive; but are more often commemorated after death. They are champions of the human spirit.

So it is right that not everyone can be a champion. But many, perhaps even most of us, have the capacity to do something exceptionally well. Most of us have a gift.

The issue is: how to develop that gift? What are the qualities that take the talent and turn it into an achievement, that translate the ordinary into the extraordinary?

Because for sure, there is a part, perhaps even the major part of being a champion that is not to do with natural physique or natural intellect but is to do with character, attitude, the dimension of the mind that can be discovered and developed. You can improve.

You can, in doing so, cross the line between the average and the good and in time even the line between the good and the outstanding.

It can be dangerous to describe rules of improvement, to try to codify the qualities. Champions are about exceptions, not rules.

Nonetheless, I believe it is possible to identify characteristics you find in champions. I have chosen seven.

First, success comes to those who strive. Striving is a better concept than merely being competitive. In the Bible, Jacob is renamed after wrestling with God whilst asleep. He was thereafter called Israel meaning striving with God. To me, striving is more than wanting to be the best. It means even if you are the best, striving to be better. It is the product of a spirit that is restless for still greater things. It can mean a state of perpetual dissatisfaction, certainly with yourself.

Of course, it shows up in a strong competitive streak when in a race, be that in sport or a political campaign or anything else. But it is also an attitude that illustrates that the competitor is as much competing with himself as with others in the same race.

Secondly, champions are creative people. They are innovative. They are always pushing to the new frontier. They don't accept the "givens" of any field of endeavour. They challenge them. They are non-conventional people. Anyone I have ever met in any field, who is successful, is creative. That applies, incidentally, to the lawyer or the banker as much as the artist or thinker. The creative process is always fascinating to behold. It begins with an analytical capability that is free, not hidebound; not shackled to what has gone before.

I always found in politics that people had an amazing predisposition to conduct a debate within very defined parameters. This is what to be left-wing meant. This is what right-wing meant. This is the way the state works. This is how public services or welfare systems operate. Within the parameters debate is lively. But the parameters themselves are rarely challenged. Creative people challenge the parameters. They go back to the first principles of a subject. They ask not the superficial but the profound questions.

Which brings me to the third quality. Champions are endlessly inquisitive. I begin every day, hoping to learn something new. I regularly contemplate the vast expanses of my ignorance. I was hopeless at science at school. I regretted it ever since. I would love to learn about it now. But even in my chosen field of politics I am always searching for new insights, for original thinking, for something that makes me think anew and afresh. This also means knowing you can be wrong. You may have to re-think, and possibly radically. The characteristic of a champion is that they are prepared to do so.

All of this takes application and hard work.The fourth quality is therefore self discipline. That is more than just the hours you put in. But it is the discipline to lay aside other pleasures and concentrate hard on your own development. It is about focus and single mindedness. I remember meeting a famous pop star once who you may have thought was just a good time rock and roller. I asked him: "how do you do it?" and before he could reply, his partner said simply: "he is the most disciplined person I know". It is not just about deciding to work rather than spend an extra hour in the bar. It is about absorption in your task, about deep not shallow thought, about getting down to the core of what you are trying to achieve. It is about not accepting second best; about knowing in your heart, when something is not good enough and can and should be better. Notice that this is self discipline. Past a certain point, you and only you can provide that intensity of will.

The fifth quality is courage. No champion is without courage. It may be physical, it may be intellectual. It may be of mind or body. There is no greater courage than that shown by the Paralympians. These are the people who have not just demonstrated the normal will-power of champions, but in doing so have overcome by their passion to succeed their disability. Their courage gives hope to all. Special salutations to them.

Courage is invariably found in a champion. Inevitably a champion is out in front. Championship is like leadership. When things are in the balance, when you cannot be sure, when others are uncertain or hesitate, when the very point is that the outcome is in doubt; that is when a leader steps forward. The soldier who comes to help his fallen comrade. The health worker who risks their life to save the lives of others. The political activist who stands up for what is right when what is right is not what is popular or expedient. This is the person who when the mantle of responsibility is floating free reaches out and puts it on. The courage lies not in acting without fear; but in acting despite fear.

Such people are the people who are prepared just to go for it; to back their instinct when their instinct is all the certainty they are going to get. Taking the uncalculated risk is just foolhardy. But a calculated risk is still a risk. Calculate too much and you miscalculate. You wait for the perfect moment when such moments rarely if ever exist. At a certain point you have to step forward, with an insecure terrain beneath your feet.

What this means is that you must also be prepared to fail. This is the sixth and possibly the toughest quality of all. The strange irony of the champion is that the champion must be able to live with failure as well as enjoy success. The very act of courage, of leadership that sees you step out into the unknowable, carries with it the possibility of defeat. You must be willing to be humbled as well as exalted. You must accept that the risk, however calculated, may not pay off.

One of the most common reasons why people don't strive is the fear of failure. Yet virtually no one I have ever met who has succeeded, has not failed first. The question is what you learn from the experience, what you learn not just about the process of competing, but about yourself, the strengths you should exploit, the weaknesses you must eliminate.

The seventh quality is one some will disagree with; but which I think is the most essential of all. I believe that if you are to be a true champion, you must be motivated by more that "you". If the striving is purely selfish, if the love of personal achievement is purely the personal glory, something is missing; some aspect of championship that is elusive in definition but critical in action, Some people may see this in spiritual terms; that is one way of looking at it. Another way is simply a belief that to achieve to the highest level and beyond, to extend the frontiers of human knowledge or activity, is in and of itself, something good or worthy, noble even; that fulfils a purpose beyond your own recognition of your own self worth.

There is a reason why so many people who are champions look to use their success in helping others. Such a sentiment is located somewhere in the champion's character. It is the same reason you chose Nelson Mandela to launch this idea at the Sydney Olympics in the year 2000. Over the next three to six weeks or so of the Olympics and Paralympics, this city will be sparkling with the glittering accomplishments of the greatest sporting event in the world and billions around the world will share in the expectation, excitement and exhilaration of it all.

But we know in this same world, there is poverty, ignorance, and disease all of it preventable if humanity had the will. We know there is conflict and discord where fellow human beings suffer and die. We know there are challenges like the changing of our climate, which call us to take responsibility and to lead.

This month it is the Olympics. Next month, with rather less fanfare and publicity, will be the UN General Assembly where we will debate the Millennium Development Goals set by the world's nations in the year 2000 and due to be met in the year 2015. At present we will not meet them. We will fail, and if we do, the price is paid in the lives and misery of those who also would like to strive and compete in the world's myriad of opportunities to be champions, but who cannot.

The true champion is not just a winner. He or she is a person of compassion, of humanity, motivated by a sense of obligation to others as strong as the will to succeed for themselves.

So as we think of the champions who will stand proud on the podium, with their medals, with their nation's anthem ringing in their ears, let a part of the Olympiad spirit that is about human dignity as well as human achievement, take us to the places in our world desperate for our help. Let us hear the cries of the poor, dispossessed and oppressed, and summon up the true character of the champion to answer them.

Felicitations once again to the Chinese people. We are delighted to share in your pride and happiness. We wish this great country of China well for the Olympics and Paralympics. Thank you.

ENDS 益

水均益,1963年9月20日生于甘肃兰州,中国中视台新闻记者、主持人。任《时空》、《焦点访谈》、《环球视线》栏目记者、编导、主持人。现担任央视新闻频道《国际观察》、《高端访问》等节目主持人;曾多次获奖。

水均益 主持栏目

东方时空 焦点访谈

高端访问 环球视线

1963年,水均益出生在一户大家里。相传水家是数百年前从江南水乡浙江西迁至甘肃的。这一家出了很多知识分子,可谓是书香门第。水均益的父亲水天明是兰州大学的俄语教授,母亲在当地邮局工作。爷爷水梓曾任解放前甘肃省教育厅长。伯父水天同,1979年任兰州大学教授,从事培养莎士比亚硕士研究生。两位叔叔水天中和水天达分别是中央美术学院研究员和甘肃电视台导演。生在这样一个知识分子家庭里的水均益不仅拥有优秀的遗传基因,而且也有着更宽广视野。

教育背景

1980年至1984年兰州大学外语系,英国语言与文学专业。

工作经历

1984年至1993年,新华通讯社国际新闻编辑部,任编辑、记者;

1989年至1991年,新华社驻埃及中东总分社,任驻外记者;

1993年至今,中央电视台《东方时空》(1993年4月,水均益正式加盟《东方时空》,兼任记者和主持人)、《焦点访谈》主持人、记者、制片人。

作为新华社驻中东分社记者,积极参与了海湾战争的报道,是国内主流媒体首批赴战地采访的记者之一。同时,对阿以矛盾、巴以冲突进行了多角度、全面、深刻的报道,是国内、国际新闻报道中对中东问题有深刻研究、独特见解的记者之一。

[1]1993年,加盟中央电视台后,任《东方时空》、《焦点访谈》、《高端访问》、《环球视线》栏目记者、编导、主持人。在伊拉克危机、波黑战争、阿富汗反恐战争期间,多次赴战地采访报道,是国内著名的战地记者。在人物采访方面,采访对象大多是具有世界级影响的人物,是国内专访国际政要、世界商界巨贾和知名人士的采访“专业户”。迄今,已经有了70多次重要专访的经历。曾专访过安南、潘基文、普京、克林顿、布莱尔、李明博、金大中、穆沙拉夫、阿罗约、托莱多、阿拉法特、卡尔扎伊、基辛格、比尔·盖茨、多明戈、泰戈·伍兹、骆家辉、罗格、博尔特等等。多年来,在国际新闻报道和人物专访方面积累了丰富的经验,是国内著名的国际新闻主持人。2013年,受聘于西北师范大学,担任传媒学院兼职教授。

著书——《前沿故事》(1998年南海出版公司出版)

说这几年影视名人的书出的不少,但是出版社还是依然看好名人的效益和市场。红极一时得人物都出完了,比如赵忠祥、倪萍,人们开始寻找新的目标。在这种寻找中,我觉得出版家们比以前理性化了,创作者也更加认真了,这实际上也是市场逼的,写作者不认真,读者们恐怕就要拒绝。因为这类书出得确实不少,随便一个出名的人物,就出一本书,所以有水分的,虚张声势的书也不在少数。南海出版公司出版的水均益《前沿故事》一书,读者认同。他的采访经历本身就很吸引人,采访克林顿、拉宾,冒险去巴格达,本身就都是故事,该书第一版就印了十五万册。另外,由光明日报出版社出版的《真话实说———名主持人访谈录》读起来也很有意思,这里面的一问一答看得出写作者都是很认真的。

2专访影响

水均益被业界和广大电视观众所熟知的另一主要原因是因为他的专访节目,在专访国际风云人物方面。截至2010年5月,水均益已经成功地做过200多次这样的重要专访,其中包括前任联合国秘书长安南和加利、俄罗斯总统普京、英国首相布莱尔、法国总统希拉克、美国前总统卡特和克林顿、美国前国务卿基辛格和鲍威尔、加拿大前总理克雷蒂安、德国前总理施罗德和施密特、意大利总理普罗迪、西班牙首相萨帕特罗、欧盟委员会主席巴罗佐、韩国前任总统卢武铉、金大中及和李明博、约旦国王阿卜杜拉。[4]巴基斯坦总统穆沙拉夫、阿富汗总统卡尔扎伊,菲律宾总统阿罗约、新加坡资政李光耀、马来西亚总理巴达维和前总理马哈蒂尔、以色列前总理佩雷斯、巴勒斯坦民族权力机构前任主席阿拉法特和现任主席阿巴斯、巴西总统卢拉、委内瑞拉前总统查韦斯、墨西哥前总统福克斯、新西兰总理克拉克、埃及前总统穆巴拉克、南非前总统姆贝基、尼日利亚总统奥巴桑乔、国际奥委会前任主席罗格和萨马兰奇以及比尔·盖茨、世界三大男高音中的帕瓦罗蒂和多明戈、音乐大师帕尔曼和波利尼、服装设计大师乔治·阿玛尼、新闻业大亨默多克、美国魔术家科波菲尔、高尔夫球运动员老虎·伍兹、金融“大鳄”索罗斯、电影导演吕克·贝松、李安、吴宇森等人。

3社会评价

活跃在名人圈子里的“交际家”[6]

4成就及荣誉

水均益曾多次获得中国广播电视新闻奖

屡次受到中直机关和中央电视台的嘉奖

1995年:获得第二届”金话筒奖”;

2001年:获得第五届“金话筒奖”;

2002年:央视十佳主持人播音员甲等;

2003年:央视十佳主持人播音员甲等;

2003年:被评为中国十大杰出青年;

2004年:央视十佳主持人播音员乙等;

2006年:中国电视艺术家协会评选“中国电视节目主持人25年25人”。

国家形象人物

2010年7月,国务院新闻办公室正式启动了《国家形象系列宣传片》的拍摄工作。

作为参演人员的水均益,入选2010年《中国国家形象宣传片》人物。该片是为塑造和提升中国繁荣发展、民主进步、文明开放、和平和谐的国家形象而设立的重点项目,是在新时期探索对外传播新形式的一次有益尝试。

5婚姻生活

第一任妻子

水均益的原配妻子名叫王君,出生于北京一个知识分子家庭,曾在北京京广中心工作过。水均益和妻子王君认识,是因为王君拾到了他的电话本,两人几乎是一见钟情。可能是第一次两人给对方的感觉都还不错,以后他们又经常电话联系,而且水均益一回北京,就会约她出来。到了1991年,水均益向她求婚,两人终于喜结连理。

1993年4月,水均益正式加盟中央电视台《东方时空》,兼任记者和主持人。也就在这年的10月,他们的女儿水亦诗出生了。

2006年12月上旬,在水均益与妻子结婚15周年的纪念日,水均益邀请一些圈内好友一起聚会,众目睽睽之下,水均益捧着99朵娇艳欲滴的红玫瑰,走到妻子面前,动情地说:“谢谢你,我美丽的妻子,这些年来你为我付出的太多了,我爱你!”热烈的掌声响起来,水均益少见的浪漫举动让王君羞得满脸通红。在醉人的玫瑰花香中,王君默默地说:“选择你是我一生的幸福。如果有来生,我还愿意与你牵手到永远!”

第二任妻子

2010年元月,有记者拍到央视主持人水均益与一神秘女子一起出现在机场。接着,水均益和女孩来到停车场,走进了位于停车场里的一家快餐店,点了几样简单的饭菜,低调坐在角落里,一边吃饭一边继续低声聊天。那位女孩体贴地给水均益夹菜,两人表情平静默契,显得非常亲密恩爱。 吃完饭后水均益和女孩一起上了辆吉普车,由水均益亲自开车,汽车向大兴方向驶去,半个多小时后水均益的汽车驶入了位于大兴的一处别墅区,他们把车停到了一座双拼别墅的地下车库,一起上楼回家。

据悉,此神秘女子叫杨迪,2008年曾与水均益到南京和三亚参加活动,在一家大酒店吃龙虾。有报道称,杨迪是央视体育频道专职报道台球新闻的记者。一位央视工作人员也表示,听说水均益在三年多前与妻子离婚了,之后不久就与杨迪结婚,水均益比杨迪大13岁。

喜得龙凤胎

就在大女儿水亦诗19岁之后,现年49岁的水均益又生育了个了龙凤胎。2012年3月29日央视著名主持人水均益的妻子杨迪在北京顺利分娩,产下了一对龙凤双胞胎,取名为水左左和水右右,并已为一双儿女举办了满月宴。

水均益的女儿名叫水亦诗,是他与前妻所生的孩子。水均益给女儿取了这样一个美丽而富有诗意的名字,就是希望用这个颇具特色的名字来预祝女儿聪明、美丽。

水亦诗从小勤学上进、能歌善舞,一直是班级里的文艺骨干,有着很强的组织能力。也许是受父亲的影响,水亦诗也十分擅长主持,学校里的文艺演出常常被选为主持人。在初一时,水亦诗参加了人大附中举行的第五届主持人大赛,并且最终捧得大奖。在学习之余,她还常常被邀请到中央电视台少儿频道客串主持节目,深受小朋友们的喜爱。 不喜欢他主持的节目,口语中老是夹杂着这个嗯…那个嗯…,不如白岩松舒服 福随伦敦奥运

布莱尔先生回忆我还记得自己次参加学校足球的情景,我当时有种力不从心的感觉,感到非常失望,于是第一次感受到我是多么向往一块金牌,冠军不止是属于运动员,可以属于任何一个行业,冠军都是经过痛苦挣扎才炼成的,其

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